코칭이란? 챗GPT의 답변
A precise definition of coaching depends on the epistemological lens you adopt (behavioral, cognitive, systemic, ontological). However, across disciplines, a rigorous definition must clarify five elements: purpose, process, agency, mechanism of change, and scope of outcome.
Here is a disciplined, integrative definition:
Coaching is a structured, dialogic developmental process in which a coach facilitates a client’s expansion of awareness, restructuring of meaning, and intentional action toward self-defined goals, thereby increasing adaptive effectiveness in personal or professional contexts.
Now let me unpack that definition analytically.
1. Coaching as a Developmental Process
Coaching is not advice-giving, therapy, consulting, or mentoring.
- Therapy primarily treats dysfunction or pathology.
- Consulting transfers expertise and solutions.
- Mentoring transmits experience and guidance.
- Coaching facilitates capacity development.
It is forward-oriented and growth-centered.
2. Dialogic, Not Prescriptive
The primary tool of coaching is disciplined dialogue.
The coach:
- Does not impose solutions
- Does not diagnose pathology
- Does not prescribe strategie
Instead, the coach:
- Expands awareness
- Surfaces assumptions
- Challenges limiting interpretations
- Supports accountability
Coaching is epistemologically constructivist: it assumes people operate from meaning structures (mental models), and transformation requires shifts in those structures.
3. Core Mechanism of Change
Across models (GROW, CLEAR, Co-Active, Cognitive-Behavioral Coaching, Ontological Coaching, etc.), change typically unfolds through three underlying mechanisms:
- Awareness Expansion
Surfacing blind spots, beliefs, emotional patterns, identity assumptions. - Meaning Reconstruction
Reframing or restructuring interpretations that govern behavior. - Behavioral Commitment
Translating insight into decisive, observable action.
Without action, coaching becomes reflective conversation.
Without awareness, action becomes reactive repetition.
4. Agency and Responsibility
Coaching assumes:
- The client is resourceful.
- The client owns the goal.
- The client is responsible for implementation.
The coach owns:
- The process.
- The quality of inquiry.
- The rigor of reflection.
- The containment of the space.
5. Outcomes: Effectiveness and Adaptability
High-quality coaching increases:
- Self-regulation
- Decision clarity
- Behavioral consistency
- Relational awareness
- Strategic execution
- Learning agility
In leadership contexts, it enhances:
- Perspective range
- Emotional differentiation
- System awareness
- Capacity to influence without control